CHIEF OF STAFF

[The SECRETARY holds the door open for the
CHIEF OF STAFF who is about to go out when suddenly
in the doorway appears a young man of thirty, pale,
dark, timid. He hesitates on the threshold.

SECRETARY

[Taken aback, bowing.

Your Majesty!

CHIEF OF STAFF

[Drawing back.

My King!

[PRIME MINISTER and MINISTER OF WAR bow.

KING

[Courteously.

I trust I am not breaking in upon a matter that does
not concern me?

PRIME MINISTER

There is nothing that the King’s servants may
do that does not concern the King.

KING

True. But sometimes the King is kept in ignorance
nevertheless.

[To the SECRETARY.

What paper is that you have there, if you please?

SECRETARY

[With an uneasy glance at the others.

Here, your Majesty.

MINISTER OF WAR

[Aside to SECRETARY.

Get out!

[Exit SECRETARY.

PRIME MINISTER

It is the report of your Majesty’s interview
with the Ambassador.

KING

[Glancing at the paper and speaking in quick, excited
tones.

My message has been altered. It was conciliatory.
It is a challenge now.
Who did this?

PRIME MINISTER

Your Majesty sees the culprit before you.

KING

Are you trying to make war?

PRIME MINISTER

I am trying, your Majesty, to save the country from
the results of your Majesty’s indiscretion in
calling the Ambassador to your palace without consulting
your Ministers. If we do not strike now we lose
our prestige as a great nation, our national honor
is dragged in the dust. We have to fight.
We cannot afford to back down.

KING

[Striding across the room, agitatedly.

But this is unholy, barbaric—­this deliberate
concoction of a great, terrible war. I saw clearly
this evening as I was talking with the Ambassador
how utterly without inner necessity this war-scare
is. It is a made thing from beginning to end,
and I refuse absolutely to sanction it.